![]() ![]() ![]() “I really felt, when I was working, that my hand was guided by Richard,” he adds. Within the 37 works that are currently on show at Woodbury House is a large scale triptych that memorialises the figure of Hambleton and serves as testament to his enduring influence on Prou’s practice. “He was the first graphic artist to export his work abroad and, after seeing it in Paris in 1983, he became a big inspiration for me.” “I wanted to make a tribute to my favourite street artist,” says Prou. Prou, of course, has his own artistic influences and has drawn heavily on one in particular for this latest exhibition - the late Canadian artist Richard Hambleton, who has long been a source of inspiration for the 72-year-old Parisian. Bansky is even quoted as saying: “Every time I think I’ve painted something slightly original, I find out that Blek le Rat has done it as well, only 20 years earlier.” The Red Leopard Song For The Dead Having risen to prominence in the 80s, after he began spraying stencil artworks of rats around his home city of Paris, Prou went on to become an influential figure in the street art scene, inspiring everyone from Banksy to Swoon to Logan Hicks. ![]() Showing at Woodbury House in London is The Return of The Rat - the first UK exhibition by iconic French street artist Blek le Rat (born Xavier Prou) in over a decade. ![]()
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